Notes from the Oct. 22, 2002 Regents Meeting
by George Zamora
SOCORRO, N.M., October 24, 2002 -- New Mexico Tech's Energetic
Materials Research and Testing Center (EMRTC) recently was
named as one of 12 research facilities from around the nation
chosen to receive the 35th Annual James S. Cogswell Outstanding
Industrial Security Achievement Awards.
The New Mexico Tech Board of Regents were informed of this
latest national award bestowed on the university at the governing
board's monthly meeting on Tuesday, October 22.
The Cogswell Awards are the most prestigious in the industrial
security field. Of the 11,000 to 12,000 contractors
participating in the National Industrial Security Program, only
a handful of them are selected each year to receive this Defense
Security Service award.
In a separate presentation to the Board of Regents, New Mexico
Tech Vice President for Research Van Romero provided an update
on the university's strategic plan, specifically focusing on the
plan's goal titled "New Mexico Tech will be noted for
excellent and productive instruction and research."
In his overview, Romero noted that New Mexico Tech also has
received recent acclaim in national rankings published by The
Princeton Review, U.S. News & World Report, Kiplinger's,
and The Chronicle of Higher Education.
New Mexico Tech President Daniel H. López also had
good news for the regents, reporting that preliminary enrollment
figures for Spring Semester 2003, as well as for Fall Semester
2003, at the university "are looking very encouraging."
The projections are based largely on incoming student applications,
an area which is showing a significant increase this year when
compared to last year's figures.
López also told the New Mexico Tech Board of Regents
that a recently held annual fundraising golf tournament on campus
had been "a great success," netting about $75,000 this
year for a special financial assistance program which the President
set up for Tech students some eight years ago.
In another report to the board of regents, Steve Bobinsky,
director of the New Mexico Tech Advancement Office, briefed the
regents on the status of the university's ongoing Commitment to
Excellence fundraising campaign.
After having started with a "silent phase" over
a year ago, New Mexico Tech's "Commitment to Excellence"
campaign, now in its public phase, has garnered slightly more
than $4.2 million in cash, gifts, and pledges, reported Bobinsky,
who is also director of Tech's fundraising campaign.
"But though our base goal is $5 million, our challenge
goal is $8 million, so we've still got a long way to go before
we wrap up our campaign on April 2003," Bobinsky said.
The objectives of New Mexico Tech's Commitment to Excellence
campaign are to increase faculty endowments; strengthen
instructional laboratory support; boost student scholarships and
fellowships; improve online library resources; and expand the
university's Etscorn Campus Observatory.
In the only official action taken at this month's meeting,
the New Mexico Tech Board of Regents approved a low bid submitted
by A & A Pumping Services, Inc. of Belen for providing sanitary
disposal services for several of EMRTC's field test sites.
-NMT-
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